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Responsible Conduct of ResearchA Shared Responsibility
● 5 Qualities of Good Research Mentors
● 5 Ways Supervisors Can Promote Research Integrity
● The Research Community SafeguardsScientific Integrity
● Write Ethically from Start to Finish
● Tips for Avoiding Plagarism
● Authorship Practices to Avoid Conflicts
● Tips for Presenting Scientific Images with Integrity
● Everyone Plays a Role in Research IntegrityA “Publish or Perish” Case Study
Download RCR posters from: www.purdue.edu/research/regulatory-affairs/researcher-training/ or contact [email protected] to request copies
5 QUALITIES OF GOOD RESEARCH MENTORS
“A mentor is a person who has achieved career success and counsels and guides another for the purpose of helping him or her achieve like success.”1
RESPECTFUL Demonstrates respect for all laboratory members, which reduces fear and unhealthy competitiveness.
SUPPORTIVE Supports mentees by acknowledging accomplishments and challenging mentees to develop skills that advance their careers.
AVAILABLE Establishes open and responsive communication with mentees, which promotes research integrity and discourages questionable research practices.
PREPARED Anticipates the needs of mentees and is prepared to provide assistance and guidance.
HONEST Respondents in over 50% of ORI’s findings of research misconduct are postdocs, students, technicians, and research assistants.2
Sets high standards for honest reporting of data, regardless of whether the data supports the desired outcome. 50%
Why is mentorship important? Good mentorship improves the quality and integrity of scientific research.
Citations: 1 https://oir.nih.gov/sourcebook/mentoring-training/guide-training-mentoring 2 From 2006 to 2015. See Page 8: https://ori.hhs.gov/images/ddblock/march_vol24_no1.pdf
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WAYS SUPERVISORSCAN PROMOTE
RESEARCH INTEGRITYAre you a principal investigator, research coordinator, academic advisor, or mentor? Roles such as these place you in a unique position to cultivate exceptional research
practices among the next generation of researchers.
Your team wants to learn from
YOU! You are responsible for the integrity of your teamʼs data.
COMMUNICATE Prevent misunderstandings
EXPECTATIONSby making sure everyone is on the same page.
Avoid making assumptions about anyoneʼs skills or knowledge.
Be prepared in case you ever suspect research misconduct.
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THE RESEARCH COMMUNITY SAFEGUARDSSCIENTIFIC INTEGRITY
WHAT'SYOURROLE?
INSTITUTIONS Foster a culture of research integrity through mentoring,education, and policies
RESEARCHERSReproduce, expand on, and openly debate research results
FUNDING AGENCIESEnsure funding of quality research through rigorous grant review
WHISTLEBLOWERSDraw attention to questionable research
JOURNALS & PEER REVIEWERSScrutinize submissions to disseminate accurate research
GOVERNMENTREGULATORY AGENCIES
Protect humans, animals, and taxdollars in research and handle
research misconduct allegations
Learn more about responsible research with our educational materials: ori.hhs.gov/resources
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FR0M START TO FINISH
PREPARE
PRIMARY
USE LITERATURE
Secondary sources might have misinterpreted the work
HAVE A
THOROUGHUNDERSTANDINGOF YOUR SOURCES
Accurately communicate their ideas and terminology
WRITE
AVOID
SELECTIVEREPORTING Present unbiased information by acknowledging conflicting evidence and alternative interpretations
CITE YOUR SOURCES
DO NOT PLAGIARIZE
USE YOUR
OWN WORDSMAINTAIN QUOTE
AND THE INTENDED VERBATIMSENTENCE MEANING TEXTSTRUCTURE OF THE SOURCE
PUBLISH
GIFT AUTHORSHIPIS
UNETHICAL
Only include those who have made substantial contributions to a project
AVOIDGHOST AUTHORSHIP
Give proper authorship or acknowledgment to those who have contributed to a paper
Learn more about ethical writing: ori.hhs.gov/ethical_writing
Roig, M. (n.d.). Avoiding plagiarism, self-plagiarism, and other questionable writing practices: A guide to ethical writing. Retrieved September 01, 2016, from https://ori.hhs.gov/ethical_writing
U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Services
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TIPS FOR AVOIDING PLAGIARISM
WHAT IS PLAGIARISM? The appropriation of another personʼs ideas, processes, results, or words without giving appropriate credit.
“Don’t plagiarize. Express your own thoughts in your own words…. Note, too, that simply changing a few words here and there, or changing the order of a few words in a sentence or paragraph, is still plagiarism. Plagiarism is one of the most serious crimes in academia.”1
“You paraphrase appropriately when you represent an idea in your own words more clearly and pointedly than the source does. But readers will think that you plagiarize if they can match your words and phrasing with those of your source.”2
1 Always acknowledge the contributions of others in your work
2 Identify the citation source when paraphrasing or summarizing
3 Provide a citation when in doubt about facts or common knowledge
4 Always enclose verbatim text in quotation marks with an accompanying citation
5 Cite primary sources of information not secondary or tertiary Adapted from Avoiding Plagiarism, Self-Plagiarism, and Other
Questionable Writing Practices: A Guide to Ethical Writing by Miguel Roig.
View 28 Guidelines to Avoid Plagiarism: https://ori.hhs.gov/plagiarism-0
Citations: 1 Pechnick, J. A. (2013). A short guide to writing about biology, 8th Edition. Boston: Pearson. Page 5. 2 Booth, W. C., Colomb, G. G., & Williams, J. M. (2008). The craft of research. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. Bright Tunes Music Corp. v. Harrisongs Music, Ltd. (1976). 420 F.Supp. 177 (S.D.N.Y). march_vol24_no1.pdf. Page 194.
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AUTHORSHIP PRACTICES TO AVOID CONFLICTS
Every field of study experiences conflicts with determining authorship on published papers
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Those who assisted1 with a manuscript but did not provide substantial contributions can be given acknowledgement.
Implementing the following suggestions may help avoid potential authorship disputes:
BE PREPARED Establish written authorship agreements with all members of the lab and other collaborators before preparing a manuscript or before starting a project.
DOCUMENT CONTRIBUTIONS Authors should list their substantial contributions to the design of the study; the acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data; and the contribution to the writing of the final paper.
BE CONSISTENT Have clearly written expectations for authorship on publications and follow them.
COMMUNICATE OFTEN As the project progresses, the authorship agreement may need to be revisited.
APPROVE THE MANUSCRIPT All authors should review manuscripts and approve the final version.
1This may include people who provide support such as: editorial assistance (e.g., proofreading), limited data collection, supervision of research tasks without contribution to the collection, analysis, or interpretation of data, or the writing of the publication, and technical support
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67%
BE AWARE:
IMAGE BIMAGE A
10X MAGNIFICATION
PRES
ENTI
NG SCIENTIFIC IMAGES
with
INTEGRITYTIPS
FO
R
of ORI’s closed research misconduct cases involved image manipulation.*
Undocumented image manipulations can lead to accusations of research
misconduct.
Images should clearly and correctly represent research results. Minor image processing may be acceptable but, as depicted below there's a fine line between enhancing an image and distorting it.
Reference information was selectively removed from the image causing loss of data.
Two images were combined causing them to look likenew data.
Clearly indicate where twoimages were joined using a dividing line and labels.
Use a magnification panel to highlight desired visual data.
LEARN MORE ABOUT IMAGE PROCESSING: http://ori.hhs.gov/ImageProcessing
Contrast and saturation were increased causing the background cells to disappear.
Ensure that the meaning of the image stays the same and fine details are not removed.
ORIGINAL IMAGE
Changing the contrast, color, or brightness
Combining multiple images into one image SPLICE & PASTE
Cutting out components and resizing CROP
WHAT ELSE MUST YOU DO?Clearly document all changes made to an image.
Retain the unprocessed image for your records.
Follow journal guidelines for premissible processing.
COLOR ENHANCEMENTS
*between 2011 and 2015
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EVERYONE PLAYS A ROLE IN RESEARCH INTEGRITY A “PUBLISH OR PERISH” CASE STUDY
There are many reasons someone might engage in research misconduct — such as inadequate training and oversight, personal and professional stress, and fear of failure.
One potential driver of research misconduct is the pressure to "publish or perish." Let's look at how this is affecting Bob, a young scientist, and how his environment may be a contributing factor.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) defines research misconduct as:
FABRICATION, FALSIFICATION, or PLAGIARISM in proposing, performing, or reviewing research,
or in reporting research results.1
PERS
ON
AL
LEVE
L
Bob is falsifying data Bob is working hard to publish his research. He is facing a tight deadline and his experiments are not yielding desirable results. He feels that the only way to meet his deadline is to falsify his data.
What leads him to commit research misconduct?
HHS makes about 13 findings of researchmisconduct a year.
INTE
RPER
SON
ALLE
VEL
Bob’s lab is under pressure to publish Dr. C, Bob’s boss, places unreasonable demands on the lab team to produce publishable results. Dr. C is busy and rarely reviews the raw
data. Without any oversight, Bob easily falsifies his data.
What can his lab supervisor do to reduce this pressure?
In 45 cases of research misconduct committed by trainees, 72%
of supervisors had not reviewed the source data.2
INST
ITU
TIO
NAL
LE
VEL
The university rewards academic publications and grants Dr. C needs more publications to earn tenure. Her department chair requires Dr. C to secure grant funding to maintain her lab. These pressures distract Dr. C from her mentoring responsibilities in the lab.
What can the university do to reward responsible research?
RESE
ARC
H C
OM
MU
NIT
YLE
VEL
The research communityreinforces the pressure to
“publish or perish” Bob, Dr. C, and their institution are part of a broader research community. They all face the competitive pressures generated by
their peers, funding sources, journals, and academic societies.
What can the research community do to change this norm?
only publishes about 8% of papers submitted.3
The pressures scientists face are perpetuated at every level. What can you do to promote integrity from your place in this system?
Citations:1 For the full definition of research misconduct, see 42 C.F.R. § 93.103.2 Wright, D. E., Titus, S. L., Cornelison, J. B.. (2008). Mentoring and Research Misconduct: An Analysis of Research Mentoring i n Closed ORI Cases. Science and Engineering Ethics, 14, 323-336.
3 Getting Published In Nature: The Editorial Process. (2016). Retrieved March 17, 2016 http://www.nature.com/nature/authors/get_published/
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